What use cases do you imagine for LLMs in home automation? I have HA and a mini PC capable of running decently sized LLMs but all my home automation is super deterministic (e.g. close window covers 30 minutes after…
It would be possible to proactively pass a law that is incompatible with future attempts, right? E.g. in this case something like a "right to chat secrecy" law.
That design you describe is what is pictured at the top of the article. Problem is that then the keys are not equally spaced chromatically (e.g. larger spacing between B and C than between C and C#). You could probably…
I like Janet a lot, and have been using it for small personal projects for about a year. But it does come with some design decisions that I'm a bit ambivalent about and for which I haven't found a good explanation: - No…
> lot of clojure developers could benefit from this immensely. Curious what you think Clojure developers could benefit from specifically. Having done web services in both languages I much prefer the experience in…
The German social contract for a long time was that the working class gets low wages, which keeps German exports competitive and combined with the large internal market, prices low. In return for making the owning class…
I'm missing clarity about how do I escape Instant DB when I need to, and how to make it part of a larger system. Say I have an InstantDB app, can I stream events from the instant backend to somewhere else?
There is no standard writing system for Swiss German. So she might have used it, but it would be unclear to most Swiss what it means/how it should be pronounced.
> train composed of heavy-axle rail cars has an upper limit of about 160 tons. 1000 axles sounds doable, but maybe not very practical.
I think it doesn't need to be for relative time intervals like "1 min ago".
In IT we (wrongly) use the word "production" to refer to the systems in operation serving customers: ie. the car that has left the factory. I don't know much about cars, but Toyota has a reputation for high reliability…
> mexico, el salvador, iran, afghanistan None of those are in South America or Africa. Maybe it would be good to first understand the problem, including the geography, before proposing ideas.
There's a whole family of libraries like that. Yesql is the first I became aware of. The repo has an (incomplete) list of ports to other languages: https://github.com/krisajenkins/yesql#other-languages
From own experience, yes. When I switched to 8th grade it was a bit further, so I biked there.
I'll grant you they might want more, but they definitely require more than they _need_, like those two examples I mentioned: as long as I get its mail it's none of its business where I live, and it should definitely not…
The state keeps collecting all the data it wants, though. For example, you are mandated to declare where you live and what your religion is. Germany only takes privacy seriously when it comes to private companies.
It can't be exponential. If in 1800 there was 1G people, in 1900 2G people and in 2000 6G people, and we fit an exponential curve thought that we get less than 10 people alive in the year 0.
Oh, I agree. There's many good reasons to celebrate population stagnating: economic, social,ecological. But it's not going to be a painless transition from the last 2-300 years of a system predicated on growth.
Practically all models estimate peak population to happen somewhen in the second half of the 21. century. And most countries outside of Africa are likely to go the way of Japan far sooner.
What use cases do you imagine for LLMs in home automation? I have HA and a mini PC capable of running decently sized LLMs but all my home automation is super deterministic (e.g. close window covers 30 minutes after…
It would be possible to proactively pass a law that is incompatible with future attempts, right? E.g. in this case something like a "right to chat secrecy" law.
That design you describe is what is pictured at the top of the article. Problem is that then the keys are not equally spaced chromatically (e.g. larger spacing between B and C than between C and C#). You could probably…
I like Janet a lot, and have been using it for small personal projects for about a year. But it does come with some design decisions that I'm a bit ambivalent about and for which I haven't found a good explanation: - No…
> lot of clojure developers could benefit from this immensely. Curious what you think Clojure developers could benefit from specifically. Having done web services in both languages I much prefer the experience in…
The German social contract for a long time was that the working class gets low wages, which keeps German exports competitive and combined with the large internal market, prices low. In return for making the owning class…
I'm missing clarity about how do I escape Instant DB when I need to, and how to make it part of a larger system. Say I have an InstantDB app, can I stream events from the instant backend to somewhere else?
There is no standard writing system for Swiss German. So she might have used it, but it would be unclear to most Swiss what it means/how it should be pronounced.
> train composed of heavy-axle rail cars has an upper limit of about 160 tons. 1000 axles sounds doable, but maybe not very practical.
I think it doesn't need to be for relative time intervals like "1 min ago".
In IT we (wrongly) use the word "production" to refer to the systems in operation serving customers: ie. the car that has left the factory. I don't know much about cars, but Toyota has a reputation for high reliability…
> mexico, el salvador, iran, afghanistan None of those are in South America or Africa. Maybe it would be good to first understand the problem, including the geography, before proposing ideas.
There's a whole family of libraries like that. Yesql is the first I became aware of. The repo has an (incomplete) list of ports to other languages: https://github.com/krisajenkins/yesql#other-languages
From own experience, yes. When I switched to 8th grade it was a bit further, so I biked there.
I'll grant you they might want more, but they definitely require more than they _need_, like those two examples I mentioned: as long as I get its mail it's none of its business where I live, and it should definitely not…
The state keeps collecting all the data it wants, though. For example, you are mandated to declare where you live and what your religion is. Germany only takes privacy seriously when it comes to private companies.
It can't be exponential. If in 1800 there was 1G people, in 1900 2G people and in 2000 6G people, and we fit an exponential curve thought that we get less than 10 people alive in the year 0.
Oh, I agree. There's many good reasons to celebrate population stagnating: economic, social,ecological. But it's not going to be a painless transition from the last 2-300 years of a system predicated on growth.
Practically all models estimate peak population to happen somewhen in the second half of the 21. century. And most countries outside of Africa are likely to go the way of Japan far sooner.